Author post

To celebrate the fact that Kate Elliott’s fantasy epic the Crown of Stars series is now available on ebook through Orbit UK, Kate has written us a retrospective on the series . . . enjoy!

On Twitter, I was asked by Erin Hoffman what the legacy of the Crown of Stars series is for me today, and I’m going to say something that may seem a little odd.

Anything I tell you about the genesis of the Crown of Stars series will be a lie mediated through my own recasting of memory.

I have always said that the precipitating image for everything that came after is that of a youth walking on a path up and over a ridge in a storm, where he is met by a woman in armor riding a horse as if the storm has brought her. She offers him what he believes is his heart’s desire: To escape his boring life in the village and become a warrior. This scene occurs early in KING’S DRAGON (UK | ANZ), pretty much how I first envisioned it, but I did not at first know who the woman was; that came later.

As far as I can recall, that actually really truly is the first visual/emotional image I had for the book (all my projects have their genesis with a visual/emotional image like that one). The only other thing I’m sure of is that I had a number of conversations at the time about fantasy with my writerly friends, and I remember deciding after some deliberation to have two protagonists, one male and one female, who both are sixteen when the story begins.

In rare cases, I know exactly where one of the elements in the book came from. For instance, the inspiration for Adica (Book Four: CHILD OF FLAME) is the Egtved Girl, whose grave was uncovered in 1921. When my family lived in Copenhagen in the autumn of 1999, I often visited the National Museum where her remains lie today under glass. The cover illustration by Jody A Lee for the USA edition of CHILD OF FLAME depicts a version of her clothing.

However, I have in the past stated that the series was originally conceived as a trilogy with a second trilogy to follow if wanted (and it has more than once been suggested that I “kept adding on volumes” as I went for various reasons which I won’t mention here). I recently unearthed an email to my agent dated December 1995 (a full year before the publication of the first book) in which I list a full six volume sequence ready to go.

For the sake of comparison, here are the titles from the 12/1995 email:

As you can see, the original title for book one was meant to be DRAGON’S HEART, scrapped when the film DRAGONHEART was released. Looking back, I’m glad we used KING’S DRAGON instead.

The sixth and last volume was split into two because of size: thus the sequence became seven volumes which, in the end, fit certain thematic elements present in the story and the setting better than six would have.

Because of things like this, I don’t really trust my memory of how and why I wrote the book or why I wrote it the way I did and most importantly why I made the choices I made. I can only for sure tell you what I now believe about those choices and that impetus. People who were around me at the time of writing each of the volumes will probably have a better memory of where bits and pieces came from.

Crown of Stars has another legacy for me, a more slippery one that has to do with my own ability to approve, defend, or applaud, even in my own mind, the worth of my work and creativity.

For years I would often say apologetic things about the setting of the book – apologizing is one of those reflexive personality things that I’m really sorry I can’t shake off – calling it ‘faux medieval’ because I was hyperaware that I am not an academic or a medievalist and thus have no specialized knowledge. Sometimes I made these kind of mildly disparaging remarks about my own work thinking it would head off criticism: for one thing, because Crown of Stars is an alternate history drawn from medieval Europe not an historical novel purporting to recreate with rigor an actual period of medieval Europe (10th century Germany, if you care about such things); for another, because I so often heard people denigrate epic/high fantasy, a genre I have always loved. At times I apologized simply because I know my writing has flaws; I’m not perfect; I make mistakes: For some reason this all had to be apologized for even if it is in the nature of creative work to have flaws.

In fact, I read many academic books and articles as research for the series, filled notebooks and file folders with notes, details, comments, a florilegium of quotes; I made a timeline, a seven year calendar, genealogy charts, maps, crude architectural drawings, lists of character names, list of potential chapter titles, on and on, and pages and pages of notes on characters and events and possible scene breakdowns and plot expansions. The usual. Many writers do this kind of work (in kind if not in content) before and during the writing of a book.

So why was it so hard for me to say not “the setting is faux medieval (sorry sorry)” but rather, “the setting is vivid and detailed and complex because it is based on research and driven by my desire to comprehend and portray what life would be like in a different time and place”?

I don’t know. But I learned that I have to stand up for my own work. Who else will, if I won’t?

That doesn’t mean I don’t acknowledge the flaws. Seeing what I did wrong makes it possible for me to improve. In retrospect, for example, I wish I had known how to cut ten percent of the verbiage; I could have done so without eliminating any characters or plot lines (all of which eventually fold back in to the larger thematic plot), and it would have streamlined the reading experience a bit even though it would still be the huge story that it is meant to be. But I didn’t know how to do that then; I learned as I wrote. I worked to do something new with each volume: I worked on improving my prose and pacing; I focused on making scenes stronger and more emotionally engaging; I endeavored to make the characters act believably with both flaws and strengths, with triumphs and disasters. Vitally, I specifically wanted to show the small quiet everyday moments of life lived, the people and the daily life and work that is often forgotten or considered unimportant when it is in truth the foundation on which all rests.

That brings me to the other question.

Why did I write Crown of Stars?

Tolkien was been a huge influence for me as a young reader. I first read THE LORD OF THE RINGS at thirteen (having previously tried to read THE HOBBIT at eleven and completely bouncing off it). So there is certainly a sense in which I wanted to write my “LORD OF THE RINGS”, although emphatically not as an homage to Tolkien, not in imitation of Tolkien, and not as a way to try to best Tolkien (impossible because I lacked his life experience and his immense scholarly knowledge of languages and literature). It’s not that straightforward. I didn’t want to write Tolkien or be Tolkien. I never wanted that.

I wanted to write me and be me. I wanted to say what I personally – me, uniquely had to say about the idea of epic fantasy. I wanted to write the thing only I could write, one that would sweep up readers the way I had once been caught up. I wanted to write an immersive, magnificent, huge, adventurous epic story that included the people who were on the whole left out.

That meant writing a multivolume novel with characters of different ethnicities and with a full rendering of diverse cultures and societies that all have their own purpose and are the center of their own stories not just an adjunct to the dominant story. That meant writing a novel with characters from all walks of life and all ages who matter in the plot. That meant writing the story in a way that as many of the characters are women as men.

It also meant high adventure, brutal storms, bloody battles, journeys along dark and unknown roads, friendship and love in unexpected places, loyalty and treachery, joy and misery, the inner heart and the outer seeming. It meant a plot wrapped around one vast cataclysm, a terrible act of war come back to haunt the descendants of the victors long after its perpetrators are dead.

That’s the story I wrote.

I will end with a quote I wrote down into the front of my most important “world building” notebook (one of many) for Crown of Stars, so I would see it every time I checked the notebook for reference. The words of French historian Georges Duby describe something of what I tried to capture in my narrative:

An event explodes. It sends shock waves into the depths of society, and in the resultant echo we can look for signs of phenomena normally hidden in the shadows but now exposed to the light of day . . . When, moreover, the event is important, what people say about it will gradually be transformed by the complex interplay of memory and forgetting.”

about the author

Kate Elliott

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Crown of Stars is where I started with Kate’s work, and that’s because of the Nebula nomination. I was in a phase of discovering authors by award wins and nominations, and came across King’s Dragon that way.

As much as I like Kate Elliott’s writing, this series is not my fav. one from her. I prefer her CROSSROADS series. COS had a great start but then kind of followed a RJ-esque path in the middle volumes to end on a bang. Her books though always are different from the usual fantasy titles.

Amir Adel

March 30, 2013at 3:05 pm

I never read any of Kate Elliott’s books, due to the rarity of foreign books in general, and fantasy fiction in specific here in Egypt.

I follow most of her articles on various blogs, however, and I find myself liking and agreeing with every word of them, especially writing notes.

Someday I’ll get my hands on one of those books :)

Richard

April 29, 2013at 10:58 pm

First book from Kate Elliott I read was Cold Magic. Enjoyed it. The second book in that series is Cold Fire. Half way through the book I placed it in the garbage. Will not read any more works by Kate Elliott.

WCJ

May 10, 2013at 5:20 am

Crown of Stars is one of my favorite fantasy series, perhaps my favorite. While I like most of Elliott’s writing, I find the plot of CoS superior to her other series, even if her later works show a bit of evolution in pacing and character discourse. I feel that the series is unique in the vast sea of fiction that I’ve read for three important reasons: 1) CoS has some of the most profound and believable character development in response to events in the story that I have seen, 2) the protagonists and characters in general are unique and three-dimensional, and 3) the books believably draw on more than just white males and stereotyped minorities as driving parts of the action. The series has the complexity of a Song of Ice and Fire but is more believable in its human element (plots are convoluted, but not for the sake of being convoluted, and motivations are usually quite believable), it has the breadth of Jordan but without the wordiness and 5 extra books of boring tangents, and a host of unique elements all its own. Kudos to Elliott for an amazing series.

Susanne Gerold

July 27, 2013at 9:39 am

I am the german translator of CoS and I really loved translating this series.

Why?

Because, in Kate Elliotts words: “the setting is vivid and detailed and complex because it is based on research and driven by my desire to comprehend and portray what life would be like in a different time and place”.

I loved so many things about it I can only start to mention – the Eika, the King’s progress, the depth of the characters, the very clever solution of the series, the last scene, Prince Sanglant in the cathedral …

The middle age is being portrayed fascinating, great, vivid, authentic. ( I am not only german, by the way, but have studied history as well.) I could see that there was a lot of research being done and that the author’s voice came from someone who wants to understand how people would have felt in those times and under those situations.

It makes me feel nostalgic thinking about all of those wonderful scenes. I would like to have more such books to translate:-) Or to translate it again to spend more time in the CoS-universe ;-)

It is said that translating novels always have an impact on translators – CoS definitely had one on me and still resides in my mind and soul. Thank you for this, Kate, and for your help during translation.